![]() ![]() The base model Mac Studio is an excellent solution for creators, with an M1 Max chip packing 10 cores, a 24-core GPU and 16-core Neural Engine and 32GB of RAM. You get the Mac and a power lead but have to add your own keyboard, mouse or trackpad, and screen(s). The Mac Studio starts at £1,999 and boasts promising specs. ![]() The Mac Mini too is fine for everyday users, but lacks the grunt the Studio offers. The iMac is a beautiful machine for less demanding users but tops out at an eight-core standard M1 and 16GB of RAM. It is the Mac for creatives – musicians, photographers, filmmakers, designers and even coders that want the desktop experience, more ports, and need to go beyond what the current iMac can do. ![]() The Mac Studio name has arrived with intent. Pro-grade Macs have long been the choice of many creative professionals, and that’s something the company is willing to devote considerable resources to maintaining. Mac represents a much smaller slice of Apple’s gargantuan profits than the iPhone and the company’s services arm. READ MORE: Bose Soundlink Flex review: Versatile Bluetooth travel speaker packs a punch but works best at home. ![]() The Mac Studio, however, is a more creator-focused machine and is therefore relatively niche, even within the Mac lineup. In the run-up to its launch, Apple kept the Mac Studio under wraps in a way that’s almost impossible with its iPhones, subject as they are to frenzied speculation across the consumer tech press. ![]()
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